Motorcyclist USA — September-October 2017

(Chris Devlin) #1
90 | september | october 2017

GARAGE

JULIA LAPALME

“I literally grew up in the shop,” says Kennie Buchannan, seen here fine-tuning the spoke tension on a Triumph T140 front wheel. “Mom worked
the counter when she was pregnant with me, and she said I’d kick when dad struck his rawhide hammer against a rim.”


  • to many riders, wheel building is
    a black art, an ability as mysterious
    as suspension tuning. But for the
    Buchannan family—brothers Robert and
    Kennie, their father Jim, and Kennie’s
    sons Patrick and Liam—wheel building
    is an occupation and a family tradition.
    Jim founded Buchannan’s Spoke and
    Rim in Southern California in 1958, and
    the company has been in business ever
    since. The advent of one-piece alloy
    wheels in the mid-’70s and the influx of
    cheap Chinese wheel parts that began in
    the 2000s challenged the company, “but
    we still stay plenty busy with vintage
    stuff and customs,” Kennie says.
    “Busy” means building and truing
    more than 1,500 wheels a year, plus
    manufacturing spokes, nipples, and rims.
    And while business is good, Kennie knows
    that his family practices a waning craft.


“It’s getting harder to find anyone
that can true,” he remarks. “It used
to be that every shop had to deal with
damaged wheels. It seems there’s a lot
less interest in mechanics now and in
the trades in general. When dad started
the shop he probably only replaced a few
rims. Most of the time he’d straighten
and repair them. These days, not many
people know how to fix things.”
Building a wheel isn’t complicated,
but the two major steps—lacing and
truing—can be intimidating. “When
lacing up a wheel, a lot of people over-
think the process, or they don’t know
what the cross pattern for the spokes
is, or they think the spokes are too
short because the rim is turned too far,”
Kennie says. “Then they panic.”
Assembly may be tricky, but “truing
is the hardest part,” Kennie warns.

“It takes the most skill and the most
patience, and that only comes with expe-
rience. Dad, even at 90, can true a wheel
so fast. He’s got a knack for working in
two dimensions, constantly adjusting
lateral and radial runout.”
While wheels must run true to within a
few thousandths of an inch, Buchannan’s
doesn’t employ precision measuring
tools. “We use a surface gauge, and the
motion of the wheel tells you everything
you need to know,” Kennie says. “Using
a dial indicator is insanity anyway, espe-
cially with a rolled-steel rim since they’re
not actually flat. What we’re doing here
is taking an inexact part and truing it
to average the errors. If the tire thinks
the rim is true, the tire will run true.”
Building wheels may not be a black art
for the Buchannans, but it certainly is an
art form. —Ari Henning

THE LOST ART OF

WHEEL BUILDING
Balancing tension to average errors

MCY1017_LOST.indd 90 7/20/17 3:41 PM

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